Ptychophallus kuna Campos & Lemaitre, 1999
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.235127 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4DA803F1-30C6-4FC3-8EEF-9690A89822A6 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5491518 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/710D87BB-291A-1604-D6BD-FF34FD03FB45 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Ptychophallus kuna Campos & Lemaitre, 1999 |
status |
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Ptychophallus kuna Campos & Lemaitre, 1999 View in CoL
( Figs. 20, 21 View FIGURES 10 – 21 , 81 View FIGURE 81 )
Ptychophallus kuna Campos & Lemaitre, 1999: 555 View in CoL , figs. 3–5.— Rodríguez & Magalhães 2005: 356 (table I).— Rodríguez & Hedström 2000: 423.— Ng et al., 2008: 176.— Villalobos Hiriart & Álvarez 2008: 297 (in list).
Material examined. PANAMA. Colón Province: male, holotype, USNM 184340, Portobelo, 26.ii.1973, leg. unknown.
Description of gonopod. Straight in mesiocaudal view, apex bent approximately 80° in laterocephalic direction. Marginal suture on mesial side, straight; marginal process short, rounded, not produced beyond distal border of apex. Mesial process small, subtriangular, slightly downturned. Lateral process relatively short, 58% of stem length (from proximal opening to caudal border of apex), distinctly shorter than lateral end of apex, with depression around middle; lateral border with wide, deep median notch, proximal lobe with irregular border, distal lobe slightly thicker distally. Distocaudal ridge short, narrow, weakly developed, barely separated from distal border of the lateral process by shallow depression. Apex oblong, narrow; caudal border distinctly convex in mesiocaudal view, with narrow notch near lateral end. Field of apical spines well developed, facing towards cephalolateral side.
Holotype and type locality. Male, cw 24.9, cl 15.6, USNM 184340 (specimen not in good condition, dismembered, carapace partially detached from the body). Panama, Colón Province, Portobelo (Atlantic drainage).
Distribution. So far known only from the type locality in northern Panama, Atlantic drainage ( Fig. 81 View FIGURE 81 ).
Remarks. The G1 morphology of the species has a close resemblance with that of P. montanus , but they can be distinguished by the inclination angle of the apex, the shape of the lateral process, and the distocaudal ridge (see Campos & Lemaitre, 1999). In P. kuna the apex is less than 90° bent cephallad, the lateral process is distinctly shorter than the lateral end of apex, and the distocaudal ridge is weakly developed, in contrast to an apex of 90° bent cephallad, lateral process as wide as lateral end of apex, and the distocaudal ridge is well developed in P. montanus . An assessment about the morphological variability of the P. kuna ’s G1 is nevertheless not possible because the species is known only from the holotype, and the diagnostic characters may be due to the subadult condition of the specimen. The taxonomic status of the present species should be re-evaluated when new collections from central Panama become available.
USNM |
Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Ptychophallus kuna Campos & Lemaitre, 1999
Magalhães, Célio, Wehrtmann, Ingo S., Lara, Luis Rólier & Mantelatto, Fernando L. 2015 |
Ptychophallus kuna
Ng 2008: 176 |
Villalobos 2008: 297 |
Rodriguez 2005: 356 |
Rodriguez 2000: 423 |
Campos 1999: 555 |